About this Blogsphere:

This blogsphere attempts to capture, catalog and share resources relating to visual perception of information. It is about a world mostly dealing with Physical (Touch, Taste, See/Sight, Smell and Hear) and sometimes Metaphysical (and that is none-of-the-above category). Physical, for instance, touch (e.g., feel, felt, found), look and visualization, is here with an attempt to combine verbal, vocal and visual--to synchronously see, hear, share and do much more. Interestingly, in order to visualize one does not need special skills, competencies, etc. It is all about common sense, especially with human visualizations. In short, "information is in the eye of the beholder." Continue reading much more all-ado-about this Blogosphere

Akbani is a Cutchi Memon family name.

August 17, 2014

Mapping the intellectual structure in the area of humanities: Visualizing citation networks




  • Matteo Romanello (German Archaeological Institut): Exploring citation networks to study intertextuality in classics. Filmed at the University at Buffalo, SUNY.

    Jill Walker Rettberg’s Visualizing Networks of Electronic Literature maps the fragmentary and dynamic field of electronic literature by analyzing citations in 44 doctoral dissertations published between 2002 and 2013. Applying “distant reading” strategies to the ELMCIP Knowledge Base, Rettberg identifies key works in the field, shifting genres, and changing approaches to scholarship.


  • Visualising Networks of Electronic Literature: Dissertations and the Creative Works They Cite, by Jill Walker Rettberg
  •  A Co-Citation Network for Philosophy
  • EXTREMELY VISIBLE AND INCREDIBLY CLOSE READING OF LOGOS
  • Literary DNA and Google Books
  • Networking the Belfast Group through the Automated Semantic Enhancement of Existing Digital Content
  • The Trouble with Tagging
  • VIEW DHQ: VISUALIZING DATA FROM DIGITAL HUMANITIES QUARTERLY (PART I OF II) 
  •  Hacking Networks in the Humanities
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